—— — a— Impure Blood Manifests itself in hives, pimples, boils and other eruptions which disfigure the face and cause pain and annoyance, Dy purifying the blood Hood's Barsaparilla completely curea thesé (roubles and clears the skin, Hood's Barsaparilla overcomes that tired, drowsy feeling so general at this season and gives strength and vigor, Remember Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the only true blood purifler prominent- ly in the public eye today. #1; six for 85, Hood’s Pills curs bhabitusl coastipa. tion. Price 25 cents Caught Their Attention. he new Canon of Westminster was once terribly interrupted by the inces sant coughing of his congregation. Whereon he suddenly paused in his sermon and interjected remark: “Last night I was dining with the Prince of Wales.” The effect miraculous, and a deathly silence reigned as the preacher continued: “As I was not dining with ht, but with however, + the was i matter of fact, the Prince of Wales last ni my own family. I am glad, to find that I have at last secured your attention.” rr How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward any case of Catarrh that caunot be cured Hall's Catarrh Cure. _ F. J. CRexey & Co. We, the undersigned ney 1 or the last 5 y i tectly hone Die ia all business transa ind finan y able to carry tion made by thelr firn 4 West & TRUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio, Warping, Kiwnax & MarviN, Wholesale Jruggists, 'l'oledo, Olio. ~ Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act- ing directly upon the blood and mue faces of stem. Price, 75¢. per bottle, by all Drugrists, Testimonials free. by out any obliga 3 Ous sur- thes Kald Many a corn may lurk beh They Cure the Cause. Most of the « stomach. ment, The pr A great n come froin stomach. Ce al that they cine. Ripa: ease—they « They are heada } trout] Druggists rt in life comes from the iit that without arga- own Sto Have bnt juaintance Tobacco Tuitered and Torn. under where New York City Mra, W tee lh . BOLTED tion, hn pain, ian 1elow’s Soothing Syrup for chil the gums, reduces inflamm cenres wind onli Happy is the who sees hil south r. Rilmer's SwaAaMp-HRe gill Kidney and Bladder Pamphlet and Cor iaboratory 1 { a * vests } t Kinare Whata Sease of deisel it is te Know that you have no fluem, ana is cou corns. H farting (ast no dirt into the weil water, Parkers singer Tani2 is Vopaiar Su For ng. ynless, perv Wile nse chiid—was « recovery raps fie] [anm, Ala. ii a ase and dull there is A marriage than flattery » Pros an e no FAIR SAILING through life for the person who keeps in health. With a torpid liver and the impure bicod that follows it, you are an casy prey to all sorts of ailments, That “ used.-up '’ feeling is the first war that your liver isn’t doing its work. That is the time to take Dr. Pierce's Gaold- en Medical Discovery. As an appetizing restorative tonic, to repel disease and build up the needed flesh and strength, there's nothing to equal it. It rouses every organ into kealthful action, purifies and enriches the blood, braces up the whole system, and restores health and vigor. OUTHERN BUSINESS UNIVERSITY LYNCHBURG, VA. FEARLY 408 STUDENTS LAST YEAR Thor. ughly PRACTICAL Commercial Course, with comp'ete Banking and Office Department, SHORTHAND and TYPEWNKRITING a ope claity. Both sexes admitted. No vacations Ex. peones moderate, Write 1or catalogue and Journal, ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR R Dvspeptic Delicate Infirm and AGED PERSONS * JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. = REV. DR. TALMAGR day Sermon. Bubject: “Man Overboard.” ame to him and hin W weanest thou, » God, if we Text enid unto sleeper? A it God w not," "Jonah i, God told Jonah to eo to picasant errand, He wo the bt to wet away from to sen. With pack under his find him on his way to Joppa, a sé He down umong the shipping i to men lying around on the these vessels sails to-day? swear, “Yonder is a vessel I think if vou her.” Jonah steps « asks how Anchor rigging begins to ratt} of the Mediterranean harbor, and it does not sel to get on the bros what tl 4“ plunge of wave 1 “So the shipmaster o 80 he 18, that perish Nineva! mn id not go, his duty by putting goes y of rs An going to Tarshish, hurry vou may get on board d the rough oraft, much weighed, is hea i is exh ay jut the gale a larating to tl strong “Oh, Ww to ad there is a i fRAPIALD Answer @ led the santas pian around exams 3 afiiis § writes a d il G XK ma be in less It i= quite who will get h roperty. But what become of Mis soul? It ‘will go int great to be," or ‘the everlasting now. ™ “the (nfinite what is #." His soul is in des waters, and the wind is “blowing Death cries, “Overt 1 believer!” A api; tom. He paid #3 when he be landed in per Every farthing you swindle you out of, have thirty per cent. certnl rm great gu pend in sir He promise Of A great Ho will sink all the capita i 5 » you will never get to Tarshish, : Learn how sonadly men will sloop Fhe worst sinner ¢ the light he had, w a member of the church, The sailors were engaged in their lawful ealling, following the sen. The merchants on board, I sup- pons; were going down to Tarshish to barter, ut Jonah, notwithstanding his Christian profession, was flying from duty. He was found asleep in the cabin. He has been motionless for hours his arms and feet the same posture as when he lay down-his breast heaving with deep respiration. Oh, how could he sleep? What if the ship struck a rock? What if it sprang aleak? What if the clumsy oriental eraft should capsize? What would become of Jonah? So men sleep soundly now amid infinite, In almost every piace, I su board, considering He was line is long enough to fathom the srofound beneath every impenitent man, Pl unging a bottom. Eternity beneath him, befors him, around him! Rooks close by and whirlpools and hot breathed Levanters, Ye! sound asleep! Wo try to wake him up, but fail, The great surges of warning break over the hurricane deck, the gong of warning sounds through the eabin, the bell rings. ““Awnke!" ory a hundred voices, Yet sound asleep in the cabin, In the year 1775 the captain of a Greens land whaling vessel found himself at night surrounded by feebergs and “lay to” until morning, faxpecking every moment to be ground to plecss, In the morning he lookmd about and saw a ship near by He hailed i | { it. No answer, of the Getting inte a boat with erew, he pushed out for the Getting near by, he saw through the porthole n man at a stand, as though keeping a loghook, He hailed him. No answer, He went on board the vessel man sitting at the logbook, frozen to death, The logbook was dated 1762, showing that the vessel had been wan- dering for thirteen years among the ice, The satlors were found frozen among the hammocks and others in the eabin. For thirteen years this ship had been carrying it wurden of corpses, So from this gospel eraft to-day I desory for eternity, 1 ery: “Ship nhoy! Ship ahoy!” No answer. They float about, tossed and ground by the {esberzs of sin, hoisting no sail for heaven, I go on board, I find all asleep, It ism frozen sleep. Oh, that my Lord Jesus would come aboard and lay hold of the wheel and steer the craft down into the warm gulf stream of His Awake, thou that sleepest! Arise he dead, and Christ shall give thee Again, notice that men are aroused by tha most unexpected means. If Jonah had been told one year before that a heathen sea captain would ever awaken him to a anger, he would have scoffed at the {dea but here it is done, Bo now men in strangest ways are aroused from spiritual stupor. A rofane man is brought to conviction by the } of a comrade, A man h and hearing a sermon from ' oto. his barn- hand, and nx knoweth his master's ¢ ' but The careless t! BENS hemy remark A man to wughtful- I'he child's re prayers atl un Rr sie’s house, has brought salva and in the ner men are awakened, } Huntingdor hearing the {the wallitalk n used bys AVA » Countess of } ar 3 st day, an Wn hn BAM Hardoak, rd has a th Ww might hear the wars u, O sleeper? & man Jf sleeping, . fi fog ing his rd $3 ‘ Ard the ¢ hey n to-night they will say if thess men the fact that their mother he hint en have a God divine go w ng for nothing. They am he side of the ship, though ret in mad wrestle, a man, leaving his family sailed from Boston to here, On the coast of China a night of storm he made The adventurer was washed ug h senseloss—all his money gone, beg in the streets of Canton to rom starving. For two years there rommunication between himseil and They supposed him dead, their had a their chil y (yond * AH nd asleep in t he sen and sky Many years ago i Massachusetts toa t was t family, He had gone out as a captain, He was too proud to ome back as a private sailor, jut alter a while he choked down his pride and sailed for Joston. Arriving there took an evening train for the center of the State, where he had left his family, Taking the stage from the depot and riding a score of miles, he got home, He says that, going up in front of the cot. the bright moonlight, the place looked to him like heaven, He rapped on the window, and the affrighted servant let him in. He went to the room where his were sleeping, He did not dare to wake them for fear of the shook, By hin said: “Mary!” and she knew his of welcome and joy and thanksgiving to fiod, To-day | know that many of you are sea storm Chima, and yet I pray God that you may, like In the house ol many mansions vour friends are waiting to mest you, They are wondering why vou do varth, may you at last go in! It will x a bright nights very bright night a Onoe in you will find the old family faces sweeter than when fo Inst saw thom, and thers it will be found that He who was vour father's God, and your mother's God and your ehildren's God, is your own most blessed Redeomer, to whom be glory and dominion throughout all ages, world with out end, Amen, { SHAM EARTHQUAKES. How San Francisco's City Hall Was Made to Shake. The tracic death of James Wilkin- gon at the Old City Hall has called up many reminiscences of the ancient rattletrap, and many tales are told of how the structure has been considered dangerous for quarter of a century and more—ever since it was 80 badly shaken up by the great earthquake of 1868. John J. Cunningham yesterday told of how earthquakes became of everyday occurence there along in the "70's and of how two court rooms were cleared by a couple of merry wags. This was his tale: “In 1876 the southeast corner of Washington and Kearny streets the part of the build that James Wilkinson lost his life in—was occu- pled by the Recorder's oflice (Otto H. Frank was then City and County Recorder. He was an amiable slightly affected permitted as they pleased. “The ive cents a o rior man, and about with tant Willi deainess his attaches to do | i ¢ g i copying clerks engaged nt { i o 104 CL 0 ha i uperfluoys time on their hi were generally mischie took imoy isin nsiderable g earthaqns r and {frightening The clerk oS cust 114 and mak unsophistic propi- and the of the number of ae When thin we reported up stairs earth juakes were delivered to « On t floor th ”h Ie present. ne tious he he number i he bl that, barring 8 man may uy as the microbes the blood It may, therefore, we are the borders Methuselan age, and it is probable that the reason for the remarkable longevity of the patriarchs in Old Tes tament times may be due to the fact that the “old age microbe” had not | been developed, and so Methuselah | and Noah kept living an | electric car did not run over them or | the vermiform appendix did not get on the rampage and carry them off. But with the improved facilities for killing people in these days of | grade crossings, trolley cars and bicycles, it is really necessary that something should be done to give a man half a chance for existence, especially with this microbe gallop- ing up and down in his veing, puck. ering up his face, destroying his eye- sight and eliminating his teeth, so that in the vouthful days hovering about the end of his four score years he breaks down and dies not because of old age but because he has his blood full of microbes, A Seal Who Knew a Good Thing. nt} nt ligease, | tally 5 : C ely 80 long can be destroyed in nat wher gssible t f » Of an be I on because A Portland, Me., man captured a young seal a short time ago and took it to his fish house on the pier. Af ter feeding the animal a few days the captor finally decided to release it. The seal would not swim away when put in the harbor, and cried to be taken back. Afterward it was taken down the harbor and dropped over- board, but swam alongside a vessul and cried so piteously that it was taken on board and brought back te its owner. Now it goes out to swim, but invariably returns for rations of milk, and is as intelligent as the most “"kpowing’’ dog. Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. 8, Gov't Report Ral pode ABSOLUTELY PURE CAVE IN THE SIERRA NEVADAS. bBlory of a valniornia Ploneer, At a of California ploneers the best d by the secretary of the John IL. Btleff. He pared the “spread” before them recent gathering Dark Cavern Where Myriads of Bats and Other Creatures Make Homes. at Baltimore stories was tol Of all the strange places to be found in the remote recesses of the Blerra Ne association, com with vadas none {8 any stranger than a bat | the pork and beans whicl in a week, year in and year ou the of w had them, Were Berved cave in Kaweah canyon, There is 1 ing particularly itself, but the place of thousands of the mining camps twenty times , and sald ane Vv strange about the fact that it absence otnen taught him how Nearly all the time he wi 7, unusual p ¢ Qf spo 14d to do all his own ox the canyon, not mending water in the rainy al notl about the ng appearance g to attract attention dur 4 Tir 4 1 But approac » place | Of a and pic ks, £10 - EN nethod and results when igs is taken; it is pleasant taste, and acts 1 the Kidneys, leanses the sys- is colds, head- cures habitual 1 of Figs is the 3 of its kind ever pro- duced, pleasi Le taste and ac- ceptable to omach, prompt in ite action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared onl he most Lealthy and agrecable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most Pr puiar res Kuown rup of Figs is gale in 50 bottles by all ling drug- Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro- cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, LOUISVILLE, xv, KEW YORK, A.V. iy Zanzibarian Slavery. Deis Rreht at 15 ill agent a Zanzibar reports £ BIAvVe ost £200 0060 nny PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM * 2 or r Tie "LINENE®™ are tha Best and 1ost Poon eal Collars and Onfs wor. they are nade of clot, both sides Bniebed alike, snd bernie reve lade, one ooliar is egusl to ts fanny other kind Flew #8 well, wear well an well A boxof Ten Collars or Five Pairs of Cu for Twegty. Five Con! ts A Sample Collar end Palrof Cuffat il for Bla Osuts. Nemo style and sige, Ad rm REVERSIBLE COLLAR « TT Pailin 8, New York yr IMPANRT, 2 Kilby 81, Doston, An elegant book for your table and constant reference. Send for it NOW, It's New and Nice. . . OUR NEW CATALOGUE brimming full of illustrations, and show- ing how the thousand-and-one things really look. You'll like that. There are Guns, Rifles, Pistols—from all over the world, and some of our own make—Fishing Tackle, Dog Collars and Chains, Tennis Sets, etc., etc, You can see our LOVELL DIAMOND BICYCLE—The Finest Wheel on Earth the Williams Typewriter—~you ought to | have one. There's lots of other things too. pay~Sent by mail on receipt of 10 cents in or postage stamps money. BOSTON, JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO. "go So'e U. 8 Agent for “STAR” AUTOMATIC PATER FASTENER. It's only a question of time about your using Pearline. So it seems to us. It seems as if every bright woman must sce, sooner or later, how much easier and quicker and better and more economical is Pearline’s way than any other known way of washing. You can't think of any draw- it that hasn't been met and sand times over, Millions of Pearline now. Ask some uses it rightly, how much she factured only by Jas. Pyle, N.Y. SERNA back or objection to! disproved, a thou- women are using one of them, who saves by it. Manu- NANNY
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers